Overview of the Collection

Title

Photographs of the
Kinnear family

Dates

circa 1860s-1925 (inclusive)

18551930

Quantity

13 photographic prints (1 box)

Collection Number

PH0635

Summary

Photographs of
members of the Kinnear family, including Charles, George, John and Roy, who
were prominent members of the Seattle community in politics and real estate
development from the 1880s to the 1950s

The Kinnears were a prominent family in the Seattle area beginning in
the 1880s. Various members of the family were active and influential in the
areas of politics and real estate development. George Kinnear, a Seattle
pioneer real estate developer and capitalist, was born in Ross County, Ohio, in
1836. He served three years in the Union Army ending with a rank of captain in
the 47th Illinois Volunteers. He married Angie C. Simmons and had three sons,
George Kinnear, Jr. (who died in childhood), Charles A. Kinnear and Roy J.
Kinnear. He first visited Seattle in 1874 where he bought property on Queen
Anne which later became the site of the family home. By 1878, he moved his
family to Seattle and established the G. Kinnear Co., a real estate and holding
firm. He owned property on the south side of Queen Anne Hill along with
strategic parcels in the downtown area. Kinnear served as secretary of the
Immigrant Aid Society which promoted Seattle as a destination for home seekers.
In 1890, he donated 14 acres of land on Queen Anne that would become Kinnear
Park. Kinnear died of natural causes at the age of 76 on July 22, 1912, in
Seattle.

George's brother John R. Kinnear, was active in the development and
growth of the Seattle area and also made a name for himself in the political
realm. John R. Kinnear was born on July 26, 1842, in West Point, Indiana.
During the Civil War, he served three years in the 86th Indiana volunteer
infantry and participated in Sherman’s March to the Sea. After the war,
he practiced law. Kinnear visited his brother, George, in Seattle in 1881 and
found the temperate climate to be suitable for his disposition since he had had
trouble with extreme summer heat since suffering from heatstroke during the
war. He then moved with his family, wife Rebecca and children Ritchey M. and
Leata, to Seattle permanently in 1883.

John was elected to the territorial legislature in 1884 and re-elected
at the end of his term. In 1888, he was chosen to sit on the territorial
senate. He was elected to the Washington Constitutional Convention from the
20th district. His legal training won him prominence on judiciary committees
(both in the legislature and in the constitutional convention). He was the
chairman of the constitutional convention committee on corporations and
directed the work of framing those sections of the constitution that dealt with
corporate power. He narrowly missed receiving the Republican nomination for
governor at the first Republican state convention after statehood. After
Washington became a state, he was elected to the state senate where he served 8
years. His son Ritchey would later represent the same district as his father.
The elder Kinnear retired from the state senate in 1895. Kinnear suffered a
stroke in 1905 and a more severe attack in December 1910. His health continued
to fail until his death on March 31, 1912, in Seattle.

The son of George Kinnear, Charles A. Kinnear was born in Metamora,
Illinois, on March 22, 1868 and came to Seattle with his parents in 1878. He
graduated from the downtown location of the University of Washington in 1888.
He then went on to earn a law degree from the University of Michigan in 1890.
He returned to Seattle where he established a law office which he sold after
three years to join his father’s company, G. Kinnear Co., a real estate
and holding firm. Serving as president, he ran the company with his brother,
Roy J. (treasurer), for many years. They both retired after selling the firm
around 1953. He suffered from failing health for many years before dying of a
heart attack in Seattle at age 88 in 1956.

Another son of George Kinnear, Roy J. Kinnear was born in Seattle on
April 27, 1881. He graduated from the University of Washington in 1905. He
married Myrn Cosgrove in 1908 and together they had one son, George C. Kinnear
(who would later serve as Republican representative of the 36th district on
Queen Anne Hill) and one daughter, Myrn. The elder Kinnear was the Republican
representative for the 43rd district (King County) in the State House of
Representatives beginning in 1927. With his brother Charles as president, Roy
J. Kinnear served as treasurer for the family real estate business, G. Kinnear
Co., for many years. He retired from the business when it was sold around 1953.
Kinnear passed away in Seattle in December of 1959.

Ritchey M. Kinnear, the son of John R. and Rebecca M. Kinnear, was
born in Paxton, Illinois, in 1870. He was 12 years old when his family moved to
Seattle in 1883. He graduated from the territorial university and went on to
receive a law degree from Northwestern University in 1891. Kinnear was admitted
to the bar in Seattle in 1893 but never practiced law. He married Brownie Brown
in 1893. They had one son, John. In partnership with Frank Paul, Kinnear was
president and founder of Kinnear, Paul & Co., a real estate and insurance
firm. He was one of the primary owners of downtown real estate including
structures in the 5th & Pine retail district. The mayor appointed Kinnear
to the position of park commissioner in August 1914. He served in the State
Senate for two terms. He also was a member of the State Parole Board for 11
years. Kinnear suffered from an illness for several days prior to his death at
age 73 on April 4, 1943, in Seattle.

The collection includes 13 portrait photographs on carte de visite
mounts and cabinet cards of various members of the Kinnear family between the
1860s and the 1925. Most photos depict the Kinnear men in various stages of
youth. Two photographs were made at the Kinnear family home in Seattle. Some
photos were made by Seattle-area studio photographers in the 1880s while others
were made by studio photographers in Illinois and Michigan in the
1870s-1880s.

Restrictions on Use

Restrictions may exist on reproduction, quotation, or publication.
Contact Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries for
details.

Preferred Citation

The required credit line for use of images from Special Collections
is: University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections, [plus the negative
number].

The negative number is provided with the image and is a letter +
number combination such as UW13452; Hegg 1234; or NA1275. A typical credit line
would be, University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections, UW13452.